.jae.TTT' Monday, September 19, ivov. Pae 2 The Daily Nebraskan SjiiiiimiiiiiiiimmiiiHiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiii hum ntiiimniiiiHiiiiimi""""""""" mm -ITD Jiii3 1 itif ti miimii rtuiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiMitriMiiiiriiiiiJiiiririiiiiirttiiiiiiiiriiiffiiiiifiitiiifitiiiiifitiitiiiifiiiiiiiiMiiifftfiii muiiuiif iiiiiiMitiiriiiii iimiiiiiiiiiiiiiitL A Great Tradition I s fl i f i'li ti ? i 15 i i i I I ? t 1 t ' SI Many things should be included in an educational institution and one of them is tradition. ,v Tradition gives students pride and comfort in their school and adds a little color and excitement to the daily routine of study. One of Nebraska's greatest traditions until'last year had been the Homecoming displays and the Daily Nebraskan is glad to.see that this tradition will continue again this fall. "Last , year after the Innocents Society with. a great deal of mystery and suspense withdrew, its sponsorship of the displays, few, residences kept the tradition. ' This year the Corn Cobs and Tassels have announced that they will sponsor the three dimensional displays In their original form. .The Daily Nebraskan applauds Tassels and Corn Cobs for actually performing their function as the "spirit" organizations on this campus by coming to this great tradition's rescue. We encourage every living unit and . : In preparing the first half of the re views in "That's What It Says" for this year's foreign films, the Daily Nebraskan realized that one of the films which will be shown by the Nebraska Union film so ciety this year is now appearing in down town Lincoln. This film, "Dear John," which will be shown by the society March 1, is an ex ample of what the foreign films accomplish for many people. As with the film "Dear John," an indi vidual usually has trouble leaving a foreign film without talking about it, thinking about it and arguing over it for several days. This last weekend the big topic on campus besides the Student Bill of Rights has been "Dear John" and its merits or complete dismerits. The many movie goers on campus who have never bought a foreign ticket, but found "Dear John" stimulating either in their hate for its obvious vulgarity or in their praise for its hidden message and artistic qualities really should buy a foreign film season ticket and enjoy regu larljrmovies of this type that make people think. ... Z Separate from the other foreign film reviews, the Nebraskan also thought many people' "who have seen "Dear John" or heard about it might find John Thomas' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiii!iiiiii!iiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii 1 Bill Minier's Do not be mislead by the title of this column. It has absolutely nothing to do with Innocents (at least not yet), and very little to do with innocence (except as my views may lack the judgment of maturity or my naivete may overlook some of the evil inherent in the complacency of the students at this University). Hopefully I will try to unexplain things at this univ ersity which no one understands anyway. And if that doesn't make any sense, you try to title and write a column at 8:00 on Sunday morning with three oth er typewriters clacking in your ears. It was actually just before I woke up or just after; (it all seems quite hazy now), but anyway it was about that time when I suddenly found myself staring into the fuzzy face of a pooka (or poohka). I didn't know it was a pooka at first. I thought it was one of my rommates with an 8:00 sha dow. Slowly coming out of my reverie of faraway places and sinful exploits, how ever, I soon realized that I was staring into the face of a Koala Bear. Now if you've lived in a fraternity h o u s e as long as I have, you've seen stranger things that this on the morning of a Saturday night leftover hangover. So here was this Koala Bear In my room, and since I was sitting there with my mouth somewhat ajar, he politely asked if he might sit down, and then in troduced himself as Hrotbgar (he was very literary), a pooka of the ancient House of Elrond. Those of you who know anything of pookas (as you might from watching Har vey) know that a pooka is an animal, usually of immense proportions; appear ing sometimes here, sometimes there; hometimes to this one, and sometimes to that one. Now pookas are extremely wise (even as wise as Gandalf the wizard) and when they wish, nearly as powerful as the ancient elven-kings of middle-earth. Hrothgar, being of the ancient house of Elrond (and thus distantly related to Thorin Oakenshield) was one of the wisest and most powerful pookas and on very good term's,, with all elves, dwarves, and most hobbits. , t Curious as to why this pooka (or any piTokaT should pick my room to visit at 8:00 on a Sunday morning, I questioned him about his presence at this ungodly hour. Taking his time (for pookas never hurry), and munching on some berries which he had stashed In a pocket (would you believe they really do have pockets?), he explained that he felt there was much to be done here and that I had been chos en to execute his plans. Oh! 'Dear John' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiii minimi inmiiiiiimii tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin iinj I I refrained from asking him why I had been chosen (for it is wise not to question the ways of pookas), but having nothing to write in my column I assured him I would be of any possible service. Hrothgar now explained that he felt that two events of tremendous import were now in the making at the University, which indeed had surprised him because of the reputation of apathy at Nebraska (which I quickly assured him must only have been a rumor). He continued, ignor ing the interruption, by saying that he was startled but elated at the record budget which had been proposed by the Chancel lor and the Regents to the state legisla ture. Far from last year's sullied record of rumored tuition hikes and whispered mis takes of planned budgets and enrollments, the stand this year represents a renewed interest In education and the welfare of the student in a state which prevloulsy ranked 49th in the amount of money spent on education. Nevertheless, the challenge still re mains for-the ASUN and the Student Sen ate to vigorously support the administra tion in the inevitable conflict with the leg islature and its economy minded senators with their scissoring budget revisals. Hrothgar continued that this was but one facet of a greater issue now evolving at the University, that of the proposed Stu dent Bill of Rights. It is difficult to under stand how students who are at all inter ested in an education can ignore the fan tastic opportunities of a living laboratory In which to accept the responsibility for the leadership of their own lives. Anyone who wishes to remain a pup pet in the isolated community of a clois tered University in whose regulations he has no say, but whose rules he must obey, does not deserve to be enrolled in an institution of higher learning. What better place to develop charac ter and Intelligence, and what better way than by accepting the responsibility of self-regulation and government? Students should not control the entire University, for their interests are not the only ones which are served at the Univer sity. The students are, however, the most important part of this University, and to deny students any responsibility for their own governing and education is to deny this fact. The leadership and maturing possibil ities inherent in a Student Bill of Rights must be offered to the University students. If they then fail to take advantage of its educational possibilities, then students at this university are In no sense mature, adult or deserving of the opportunities of a collage education. other interested groups to back these two spirit organizations' sponsorship of t h e Homecoming displays this year and to en ter the contests for the best work. It is true that working on the Home coming displays can interfere with the fall semester's first group of hour exams es pecially for freshman, but every living unit can control this problem by beginning the work early and planning it for each indi vidual so that the work doesn't interfere with needed study. For the freshman working on the dis plays, Homecoming can thus be an aid rather than a hinderance because as he takes part in one of the school's greatest traditions he begins to feel like the school is really his, that he really belongs here and that Nebrask's traditions are his. Last year's Homecoming was sad for many of the undergraduates and the alum ni especially as they walked past the mostly dark and quiet residences that had once been lighted with excitement thanks to Tassels and Corn Cobs this year's Home coming might be different. Wayne Kreuscher review of the movie Interesting. Mr. Thom as writes: "Realism used to be a key word in discussing movies, but today it's not par ticularly relevant to films like 'Kwaidan, like 'Juliet of the Spirits,' like most of the films in this series (foreign films). "But the concept of realism is vital to "Dear John," which could not survive without it. The plot: boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy gets girl; but it's all done with the utmost fidelity to the details of contemporary experience. "Yes, it's one of those Scandanavian sex movies, but that's the least of it. The film is a detailed study of the growth of a human relationship, the kind of movie that as you watch it makes you whisper: 'How true!' "The actors are dead ringers for real people (the heroine is even a little too fat) ; but they're appealing people, and you care about them. "The oldest story formula in the world can still be rehabilitated by an artist with the sharpness of eye and ear to ren der it all so much like it really happens. Perhaps the characters should break up at the movie's end, since that would be truer to most real-life stories than their decision to get married. "But who could begrudge so charming a film the happy ending it deserves?" Wayne Kreuscher (In-No -Sense) I That's What EDITOR'S NOTE: Tickets are now on sale for the Ne braska Union film society's fourteen foreign films that will be shown every other Wednesday starting Oct. 5 at the Nebraska Theater. The tickets which are sold on a yearly basis cost $7 for students and faculty and may be bought in the Union program office. John Thomas, associate editor of the Ameridan Fed eration of Film Societies "Film Society" magazine, West Coast Division has prepared short reviews of some of these foreign films that will be shown in Lin coln this year. The Nebraskan will print . the first of these reviews today and the rest later in the week. "Eroica" Oct. 5 Andrezj Munk, one of the masters of the post-war gen eration of P o li s h film makers, is known chiefly in est for his unfinished er. Eroica," one of his earlier works, contains two sections of a triology in which the Polish worhip of heroism gets some rough treatment. The Poles are a romantic people, and you can im agine the grinding of teeth over Munk's nose thumbing pastiche of their tales of World Warll heroism In the first story a drunken cour ier stumbles through a hail of incompetently aimed b u 1 1 e t s to foil his wife's cuckolding and inci dentally, deliver a message viatl to the partisan cause. In the second, a soldier whose supposed escape from a concentration camp has made him a paragon of heroism is found hiding in the attic of his prison hut, too frightened to continue his escape but unable to come down because of his importance as a symbol. This is strong stuff, not only to the poles, but to a generation of Americans reared on John Wayne movies. The weakness of most anti-war movies is that they base themselves upon the very myths that cause the wars they attack. But "Eroica," in which the bitterest kind of cyni cism becomes the finest kind of art, is something different. "Halleluiah The Hills" Oct. 19 Adolfas Mekas is brother to Jonas, exponent of these underdeveloped heme mov ies known as- "The New American Cinema." But "H al 1 e 1 u j a h The Hills" is a pleasant sur prise beautifully photographed and edited, encased in its technique. Not that it has much con tent; it's mostly a lot of boys in camera tricks and interspersed with bur lesques of everybody else's movie. But a lot of the sheer job of making a movie comes through, and in it self becomes the film's real content. It's worth seeing alone for Ed Emshwiller's photography, as beautiful as. any you'll find In any movie from any country. After one of Emshwiller's ''' long treks across a frozen hillside you won't much care what the movie is about anyway. "Cartouche" Dec. 7 When will American audi ences learn to appreciate Phillipe De Broca? One of the original generation of "new Wave" film makers, his output has too often been dismissed as trivial or pointless. But there's not a French director around save Tate who can make comedies like De Broca. The logical heir to Rene Clair's mantle, Dc Broca is one of the few masters of thoroughly vis ual humor. "Cartouche" offers Jean Paul Belmondo as a Robin Hood-type bandit devoted to love and freedom with equal zest. The film's sure movement from w I Id comedy to final pathos is wonderfully done. Released in America at the same time as De Bro ca's "That Man From Rio," this film tended to be sub merged by that showier but essentially empty movie. "Cartouche" is a subtler, lovelier work, no less devoted to B e 1 m o n d o's athletics but with other things to offer as well. "Ashes and Diamonds" Jan. 18 Wajda is the second of the Polish post-war mast ers, and "Ashes and Dia monds" still the best-known Polish film. It made a star of Cybulski, who plays a troubled partisan tapped to kill a Communist leader. The differences between this film and "Eroica" are remarkable, and prove that the talk of a "Polish school" of film making is all to simplistic. Though the film is a little unsure of what it has to say it's gorgeously staged from be ginning to end. Daily Nebraskan Vol, 90, No, 4 Sept, lrT9M Second-class postage paid at Lincoln, N.b. Member Associated Collegiate P r e i a, National Advertising Service, Incorporated, Published at Room 51 Nebraska Union, Lincoln, Neb., 68518. TELEPHONE: 477-8711, Ex tensions 2588, 2589 and 2590. Subscription rate art U per semes ter or H for the academic year. Pub lished Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday during (he school rear, cm during vacations and exam peri ods, by the students of tht University of Nebraska under th jurisdiction of the Faculty Subcommittee on student Publications. Publications shall be free from censorship by the Subcommittee nr any person outside the University. Members of the Nebraskan are respon sible for what they causa to be printed. EDITORIAL STAFF Editor Wayne Kreuscher; Managing Editor Lois Qulnnct; News Editor Jan llkin: Mint News Editor Bill Minien R ports Editor Bob Flasnlchi Senior Staff Writers, Julie Morris. Randy lrey. Ton! Victor. Nancy Hendrtckran; Junior Staff Writers, Cheryl Tritt, Cheryl Uunlap, John Fryar, Bob Hep burn: News Assistant Eileen Wirthi Photographers Tom Rubin, Howard Kcnslpsrri Copy Editors, Fsf Bennett. Barb Rnlwrtson, ;nns Rom, Bruoe Giles, BUSLNESS STAFF Business Manager Bob Glnni National Advertising Manager pwight Clark! Local Advertising Manaasr Charles Haxteri Claesifted Advertising Manag ers, Bae Ann Olnn, Mary Jo McDon nrlli Secretary Linda Ladai Business Assistants, Jerry Wo, Is, Jim Walters. Chuck Salem, Rusty Fuller, Glenn Frlendt. Brian llalla, Mike Eysleri Subscription Manager Jim HunUi Cir culation Manager Lynn RathJesi Cir culation Assistant Gary Meyer. Wajda is continuously in control of his medium, as one beautiful image suc ceeds another. The talk between Cybulski and the heroine in a bombed-o u t church, with an inverted crucifix slowly swinging back and forth in the fore-. ground, is among the unfor gettable moments of t h e modern film. "The Shop On Main Street Feb. 1 "The Shop On. Main Street" won an Academy Award as the best foreign film of the year, which should be warning enough. As a genuine attempt to deal with acute moral di lemmas it fails both through lack of courage and of clari ty. It's a shame, too, since the film's first half is so promising. Joseph Kroner and Ida Kaminska turn in superb performances, the basic plot situation is nicely de veloped, and the whole film moves toward what should be a brilliant and moving denouncement. But at the last minute the directors chicken out and resolve the situation through coincidence instead of allowing the central char acter to make the moral decision that the whole film has been leading up to. The setting is Czechoslo Our Man Hoppe- A True To Once upon a time there was a funny looking beast called a Stock Market, It had the head of a bull and the tail of a bear. Or may be it was the other way around. Because nobody could ever tell which way it was going. Sometimes it went up which made everybody rich and happy. And sometimes it went down which made everybody poor and sad. As it affected their lives so directly, the people nat urally had a deep and mys tic faith in the Stock Mar ket. And they worshipped the incantations of its priests, who would chant things like "making a tem porary readjustment" when the Market went down, and "reflecting a healthy econ omy" when the Market went up. Then, one day, the Mar ket reflected a healthy economy by making a tern p o r a r y readjustment. Zooommm-SPLAT! Panic and bewilderment ensued. Nobody could ex plain why the M a r k e t had decided to go down rather than up. Nobody, that Is, except the noted Market Here it is, only one week into the school and already the rut has begun to be worn. Classes have been attended, notes have been taken and meetings sat through. Freshmen can't figure out why they are so tired all the time and juniors are wondering if they can hang on for just one more year. Yes, this year is shaping up just like last year and the year before that and the year before that. But to the older student there is a difference. It is an intangible thing, an es sence that would be hard to prove but which can be felt. It may be tied up with the fact that the Rag has taken a strong stand on a hot issue early in its de velopments and while doing so has bucked both the Administration and the head of student government. It may have something It Says vakia in World War II, the problem that of a man who must choose whether or not to betray to the secret po lice an elderly Jewish shop keeper he has befriended. Kroner is appointed "Aryan controller" of Miss Kaminska's shop by his brother-in-law, and soon finds himself almost a re tainder of the local Jewish community. When a po grom begins, Kroner must decide whether to turn in his new friend or risk his own neck by hiding her. Problems like this cannot be glossed over or compro mised, but the movie does just that and f u r th e r glosses the gloss with a fan tasy epilogue straight from Hollywood. Still, there are those who like the film, and audiences are sure to be sharply divided over its merits. "A Woman Is A Woman" Feb. 15 Jean-Luc Godard is prob ably the most talented nat ural film maker working today. Though slight in con tent, "A Woman Is A Wo man," his third film, shows some of the reasons why. The insignificant story, a reworking of the plot of De- Life Fairy Tale analyst, Dr. libone. Homer T. Pet- "The Stock Market," he explained, "is not only a wondrous looking beast, it is endowed with extrasen sory perception. It knows what we're thinking. And it is eager to please us. "Therefore, it moves whichever way we think it will move. If most of us think it will go up, it goes up. And if most of us think it will go down, it goes down. If we think it's a bull it's a bull. If we think it's a bear, it's a bear. This is the sole factor that controls its movement. "Thus, all we need do to be rich and happy is to think rich and happy thoughts." And it worked! Every body agreed to think the Stock Market was going to go up. So, thinking it would go up, they gave it offer ings of money. Consequent ly, it went up and up and up and up. And everybody grew rich and happy. No one was prouder than Dr. Pettibone. He showed his young son, Homer II, his thousands and thou By Liz Men to do with Student Sena tori who have honestly questioned legislation that normally passes without a whimper from the floor. Then again it may be connected with a president of a leading campus or ganization who resigned be cause she felt that the or ganization was not involv ing itself with sufficiently significant issues. This difference may be linked with these events and by the same token, it may not. It may simply peter out after a promis ing beginning. Who knows? It is hard enough to de fine, let alone analyze. The difference in cam pus feeling has already been written about and you can be sure that it will be referred to many more times as the year goes on. My comment at this time is both hackneyed and trite but nevertheless sin cereVive la difference 1 Broca's "Love Game," de tails the countless feminine wiles through which Ann a Karina manages to get preg nant by her reluctant boy friend (Jean Claude Brialy). But the important point is that the woman is Anna Karina, whom Godard was to marry short'y after the film's completion. The mov ie is a kind of public act of love, with Godard's cam era probing for e v e r y ap pealing facet of his beloved. The result is a film some times silly, sometimes re markab'e, but never dull. Claiming to be a sort of musical, it uses many of the conventions of the great Kelley-Donen films. It's a movie about singing and dancing made by p eo p 1 e who can't sing or dance, but who wish they could. True, Miss Karina does sing a (mercifully) few times, but most of the mov ie reminiscing is confined to freezing the actors into poses supposedly character istic of Gene Ke'ley and Cyd Charisse. Somehow Godard brings it off; through his frenetic, shorthand t e c h ni qu e he managed to impose upon the film much of the gaity of those musicals he cele brates but cannot duplicate. r'Jr & I if) Arthur Hoppe sands of receipts for the offerings he'd given the Market. "One day, son," he said, beaming, "these will be youn." Td rather have pie," said Homer II. an ap- "But these are certifi cates of our faith in the Stock Market, which is half bear, half bull and en dowed with extrasensory perception, It's what makes you rich and happy." "There's no such ani mal," said Homer II. It's a mythical beast." At first, Dr. Pettibone was shocked. Then he was thoughtful. Then he picked up the phone and whisper ed: "Sell short." When the news leaked that Dr. Pettibone himself had lost faith in his theory, everybody thought the Mar ket would go down. And that . . . Well, zooommm SPLAT! "See," said f :?r Dr .Pet tibone sadly to his poor, sad son as they stood in the bread line, "I was right all along." Moral: The things you've got to believe in to be rich and happy these days you wouldn't believe.